scholarly journals Nueva antropología filosófica. La idea de ser humano en las ontologías de Markus Gabriel y Quentin Meillassoux

2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-122
Author(s):  
Mario Teodoro Ramírez Cobián

En este ensayo planteo la posibilidad de una renovación de la antropología filosófica desde la perspectiva ontológica del nuevo realismo, particularmente desde las teorías filosóficas de Markus Gabriel y Quentin Meillassoux. Previamente expongo la discusión sobre la antropología filosófica que se produjo en el siglo pasado, especialmente las disputas entre Ernst Cassirer y Martin Heidegger y entre Heidegger y Jean-Paul Sartre. Doy cuenta también de las líneas principales de la corriente filosófica del “nuevo realismo”. Concluyo con la propuesta de una redefinición ontológica de ser humano, apuntando a la idea de un nuevo humanismo.  

Author(s):  
Julio Quesada

Mi ensayo ha querido explicar genealógicamente y de forma contextualizada el desencuentro entre Ernst Cassirer y Martin Heidegger en Davos, y la deriva de éste hacia el nazismo desde los presupuestos de su filosofía existencial. ¿Qué papel juega el antisemitismo espiritual en la crítica heideggeriana al neokantismo y la fenomenología trascendental? ¿Por qué la fenomenología de Edmund Husserl es "una monstruosidad"? ¿Por qué Kant se convierte en batalla y campo de batalla de la Kulturkampf? ¿Por qué se lee a Heidegger como se lee? ¿Qué sentido tiene la práctica de la historia de la filosofía en el “final” de la filosofía?My essay wanted to explain genealogically and in a contextualized way the disagreement between Cassirer and Heidegger in Davos, and its drift towards Nazism from the budgets of their existential philosophy. What role does spiritual anti-Semitism play in the Heideggerian critique of neo-Kantianism and transcendental phenomenology? Why is Husserl's phenomenology "a monstrosity"? Why does Kant become the battle and battlefield of the Kulturkampf? Why do you read Heidegger as you read? What is the meaning of the practice of the history of philosophy in the “final” of philosophy?


Author(s):  
Gregory N. Siplivii ◽  

This article is devoted to the analysis of the phenomenology “Nothingness” by Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre. Through research of existential phe­nomenology, the article also touches on the topic of “mood” as philosophical in­tentionality. Various kinds of “moods”, such as faintness (Verstimmung), ennui (Langeweile), burden (Geworden), inquisitiveness (Neugier), care (Sorge) and conscience (Gewissen), by Martin Heidegger’s and nausea (la nausée), anxiety (l’anxiété), dizziness (le vertige) by Jean-Paul Sartre, is considered in the context of what they may matter in an ontological sense. The phenomenologically under­stood “mood” as a general intentionality towards something is connected with the way in which the existing is able to ask about its own self. In addition, the ar­ticle forms the concept of the original ontological and phenomenological “in­completeness” of any existential experience. It is this incompleteness, this “al­ways-still-not” that provides an existential opportunity to realize oneself not only thrown into the world, but also different from the general flow of being. This “elusive emptiness” is interpreted in the article in accordance with the psychoan­alytic category of “real” (Jacques Lacan).


Author(s):  
Baylee Brits

Mathesis universalis is perhaps the ultimate formal system. The fact that the concept ties together truth, possibility, and formalism marks it as one of the most important concepts in Western modernity. “Mathesis” is Greek (μάθησις) for “learning” or “science.” The term is sometimes used to simply mean “mathematics”; the planet Mathesis, for instance, is named after the discipline of mathematics. It is philosophically significant when rendered as “mathesis universalis,” combining a Latinized version of the Greek μάθησις (learning) with the Latin universalis (universal). The most significant modern philosophers to develop the term were René Descartes (1596–1650) and Gottfried Leibniz (1646–1716), who used it to name a formal system that could support a project of scientia generalis (Descartes) or the ars combinatoria (Leibniz). In each case, mathesis universalis is a universal method. In this sense it does not constitute the content of the sciences but provides the formal system that undergirds no less than the acquisition and veracity of knowledge itself. Although mathesis universalis is only rarely mentioned in the literature of Descartes and Leibniz, philosophers including Edmund Husserl, Ernst Cassirer, and Martin Heidegger considered it one of the key traits of modernity, breaking with the era of substance (Rabouin) or resemblance (Foucault) to signal a new period defined by formalism and quantification. Thus, in the 20th century, the scant and often contradictory literature on mathesis actually produced by the great philosophers of the Enlightenment comes to take on an importance that far exceeds the term’s original level of systematic elaboration. The term mathesis universalis was rarely used by either Descartes or Leibniz, and the latter used many different terms to refer to the same concept. The complexity and subtlety of the term, combined with difficulties in establishing a rigorous systematic interpretation, has meant that mathesis universalis is often used vaguely or to encompass all scientific method. It is a difficult concept to account for, because although many philosophers and literary theorists will casually refer to it, often in its abbreviated form (Lacan references mathesis in opposition to poesis to contrast the procedures of the sciences and the arts, for instance), there is not a great deal of consistent theoretical elaboration of the term in literary and cultural theory. Although mathesis universalis is not simply an avatar of mathematics, it is difficult to establish exactly where maths ends and mathesis begins, so to speak. The distinction is murky in both Descartes’s and Leibniz’s work, and this ambiguity would become a key controversy surrounding the term in the 20th century, with Bertrand Russell arguing that the significance of symbolic logic to mathesis universalis prevented it from being a “premier” science. Along with Russell, Ernst Cassirer and Louis Couturat would contest the relation between symbolic logic and the symbolic algebra of mathesis universalis, providing the terms of the debate for 20th-century philosophical work on ontology. Mathesis universalis was also a source of debate and controversy in the 20th century because it provided a node from which to examine the status of scientific truth. It is the work of 20th-century philosophers that expanded the significance of the term, using it to exemplify aspects of Enlightenment thought that many philosophers wished to react against, namely the aspiration to a universal science and the privileging of formal systems as avenues to truth. In this respect, the term is associated with Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, and especially Michel Foucault, whose extensive work on the “classical episteme” provided a popular method of characterizing the development and enduring features of Enlightenment science. Although Foucault’s rendering of mathesis universalis as a “science of calculation” in The Order of Things (1970) is the most commonly used definition in literary and cultural studies, debates centering on Leibniz’s work in the early 20th century suggest that critics still took divergent approaches to the definition and significance of the term. It is Foucault who has popularized the contraction of the term to “mathesis.”


Dialogue ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 660-669
Author(s):  
Robert Nadeau

La Bibliothèque des Archives de Philosophic comprend maintenant un ouvrage où l'on trouve la traduction française de quatre textes importants pour l'historien du savoir. Le texte central est celui du Collogue Cassirer-Heidegger qui eut lieu à Davos en mars 1929, où les deux philosophes confrontèrent leur lecture de Kant. Les trios autres textes ont pour but de mettre un peu mieux en lumière le sens de cette confrontation: il s'agit1. du résumé anonyme des « Conférences du Professeur Martin Heidegger sur la Critique de la Raison Pure de Kant et sur la tâche d'une fondation de la Métaphysique » et du résumé des « Conférences du Professeur Ernst Cassirer »;2. du compte rendu fait par Cassirer du Kant-Buch de Heidegger;3. du compte rendu fait par Heidegger du deuxième volume de la Philosophie der symbolischen Formen de Cassirer.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
GILVAN CHARLES CERQUEIRA DE ARAUJO

Resumo: Este artigo possui como objetivo principal apresentar uma reflexão sobre o filme The Sunset Limited, lançado em 2011. A partir da interação entre os personagens Black e White são trabalhadas temáticas como o propósito do existir e das decisões entre o nada e o ser. A partir desse ponto de partida do debate proposto, perpassa-se, também, pela ecceidade e niilidade expostas no longa-metragem, pelas vozes de seus personagens principais e desenvolvimento do roteiro. A análise apresentada também fará uso de um referencial teórico-conceitual de autores como Martin Heidegger, Jean-Paul Sartre e Albert Camus, para que possamos pensar de forma mais profunda os pontos de interação dramática, dialógica e de desenvolvimento da trama do filme. Espera-se, portanto, a partir dessa obra lançarmos mão de temáticas como vida e morte, suicídio e religiosidade, cotidiano e trabalho, questões de sociabilidade ou isolamento e solidão trabalhadas pelo filme e passíveis de serem colocados em uma análise crítica e reflexiva.


2011 ◽  
Vol 23 (33) ◽  
pp. 359
Author(s):  
Claudia Murta

No ano universitário de 1962-63, Lacan, em seu Seminário, propõe a angústia como um afeto. Para ele, o afeto não é uma emoção, pois a cada vez que se referencia aos afetos na psicanálise, procura afastá-los das propostas de análise psicofisiológica e procura se aproximar da filosofia. Para tanto, ele cita filósofos tais como Jean-Paul Sartre, Martin Heidegger e Sören Kierkegaard, além de Sigmund Freud. O objetivo deste artigo é percorrer as referências lacanianas às concepções dos filósofos citados, incluindo as concepções freudianas, sobre o tema da angústia e articulá-las às proposições lacanianas sobre o mesmo tema. A partir dessa comparação poder-se-á acompanhar o motivo pelo qual Lacan prefere se referir à filosofia para abordar o tema da angústia em vez de abordá-la a partir das referências psicofisiológicas.


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
pp. 227-233
Author(s):  
Maria Cristina Ferreira dos Santos

O objetivo do artigo é analisar, sob o viés mnemônico, histórico e traumático, a obra autobiográfica Mácula, de Pedro Penteado do Prado (2013), a qual discorre sobre as mazelas de um garoto que injustamente foi acusado de subversivo e sofreu escabrosas torturas. Ademais, demonstrar que o sofrimento dos que foram massacrados pela falta de liberdade que pairou no Brasil durante o período Militar não apenas os determinou como sujeitos históricos que tem memórias enfermas, mas também nos determina como herdeiros destes anos de chumbo.  Para isso, serão usados os pressupostos teóricos de Martin Heidegger, Jean Paul Sartre, Jan Assmann e Paul Ricoeur.


Author(s):  
Vincenzo Ferrone

This chapter examines the debate between Ernst Cassirer and Martin Heidegger over the question “What is man?”—and thus, indirectly, the authentic meaning of Immanuel Kant's philosophy—and relates it to Pope Benedict XVI's views on the complex relationship between Christianity and Enlightenment culture. What was at stake in the Cassirer–Heidegger debate was the very existence of the Enlightenment and the legitimacy of its epistemological foundation. Cassirer accepted the need to redefine the relationship between the a priori and experience, in view of an idealistic conception of Kantian transcendentalism that was both more complex and problematic. His position remained firmly within the universalistic tradition of Enlightenment humanism. Heidegger, on the other hand, saw the Enlightenment as the final phase of the vilified trajectory of Western metaphysics that had resulted in the enthronement of man. The chapter also considers the Catholic Church's anti-Enlightenment positions.


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